I came across this post from another forum (from last year) that seems interesting also in the context of Rowe trade (looked by some as S here). Going for safeties over corners at DB to take advantage of the undervalued position - at the moment when CB contracts are going sky high - does seem like another master stroke by BB.
(this was posted under a nice article @Patspulpit about Harmon and Pats 3 safety coverage - also a good read in context of where Rowe can fit now and in the future. The link is here:
Film Room: The Impact of Duron Harmon)
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?Is Belichick rethinking how you man the secondary?
I’m hoping someone more knowledgeable than myself can help me with this….Belichick is known for rethinking how you play positions (think, undersized WRs, 2,3, 4 TE sets, etc). Belichick has 12 DBs on the roster (not counting 2 on IR, and another 2 on PS), which seems like overkill. Most of these players are listed as safeties, not cornerbacks. And I just don’t get why BB is focusing on safeties instead of cornerbacks, especially considering how thin we are at cornerback. For whatever his reasoning, BB opted not to draft a corner until the 7th round, but drafted a safety in the 2nd (and I’m not arguing that he should’ve done something different).
Given BB’s draft picks and his subsequent additions during this season (including keeping McCourty and letting Revis/Browner/Arrington walk), BB , imo, is making a calculated effort here to focus on safeties, not CBs in the defensive gameplan. And to me that’s important — this isn’t Belichick looking at his secondary and saying "well, we will work with what’s available; we’ll improvise with the talent we have". No, BB KNEW he wanted to try and change the focus of the secondary from one that is CB-driven, to one that is Safety-driven. I think this post illustrates perfectly how well it is working so far. Malcolm Butler will forever be a hero to me, but let’s be honest, BB is manning the CB position with scrubs. But their deficiencies are being greatly limited due to strong safety play.
My question is, how "revolutionary" (for lack of a better term) is this move, especially in the pass-happy era that we are in today? If you ask me, I think BB once again saw an undervalued position (safeties), especially vis-a-vis CBs (which is quickly becoming one of the most expensive positions in football), and is trying to leverage that discrepancy by grabbing undervalued talent at the safety position and changing what that position is typically asked to do. What do y’all think? Curious to get some other people’s thoughts on this. Thanks guys!!!
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Nov 4, 2015 | 10:52 AM